Summary points:
- Scammers are increasingly using Windows Push Notifications to impersonate legitimate alerts
- Recent campaigns pose as a Windows Defender Update
- Victims end up allowing the installation of a malicious Windows Application that targets user and system information
Browser push notifications can highly resemble Windows system notifications. As recently discussed, scammers are abusing push notifications to trick users into taking action. This recent example demonstrates the social engineering tactics used to trick users into installing a fake Windows Defender update. A toaster popup in the tray informs the user of a Windows Defender Update.
Clicking the message takes the user to a fake update website.
The site serves a signed ms-appinstaller (MSIX) package. When downloaded and run, the user is prompted to install a supposed Defender Update from “Publisher: Microsoft”
After installation, the “Defender Update” App appears in the start menu like other Windows Apps.
The shortcut points to the installed malware: C:\Program Files\WindowsApps\245d1cf3-25fc-4ce1-9a58-7cd13f94923a_1.0.0.0_neutral__7afzw0tp1da5e\bloom\Eversible.exe, which is a data stealing trojan, targeting various applications and information:
- System information (Process list, Drive details, Serial number, RAM, Graphics card details)
- Application profile data (Chrome, Exodus wallet, Ethereum wallet, Opera, Telegram Desktop)
- User data (Credit card, FileZilla)
Am I protected?
- McAfee customers utilizing Real Protect Cloud were proactively protected from this threat due to machine learning.
- McAfee customers utilizing web protection (including McAfee Web Advisor and McAfee Web Control) are protected from known malicious sites.
- McAfee Global Threat Intelligence (GTI) provides protection at Very Low sensitivity
General safety tips
- See: How to Stop the Popups
- Scams can be quite convincing. It’s better to be quick to block something and slow to allow than the opposite.
- When in doubt, initiate the communication yourself.
- For Windows Updates, click the Start Menu and type “Check For Updates”, click the System Settings link.
- Manually enter in a web address rather than clicking a link sent to you.
- Confirm numbers and addresses before reaching out, such as phone and email.
Reference IOCs
- MSIX installer: 02262a420bf52a0a428a26d86aca177796f18d1913b834b0cbed19367985e190
- exe: 0dd432078b93dfcea94bec8b7e6991bcc050e6307cd1cb593583e7b5a9a0f9dc
- Installer source site: updatedefender [dot] online
The post Scammers Impersonating Windows Defender to Push Malicious Windows Apps appeared first on McAfee Blogs.